Glühwein Recipe: How to Make Your New Favorite Kind of Mulled Wine - The Manual (2024)

Glühwein Recipe: How to Make Your New Favorite Kind of Mulled Wine - The Manual (1)
Glühwein is the bomb.

If you’re not familiar, it’s a type of mulled wine that’s popular in Germany and other parts of Europe.Glühwein is typically made in huge batches and served by the flagon at German Christmas markets, and, frankly, we’re baffled as to why it’s not more popular in the States.If you’ve never tried it before, you’re missing out — specially as we enter the coldest, finger-freezing months of winter.

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The thing is, there’s not really a hard-set recipe for how to make glühwein. It’s one of those open-ended things that everyone has their own unique take on. That’s not to say you should just jump in and start making it blindly, however. You can definitely botch it and make an undrinkable brew if you’re not careful.

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To help guide you on this boozy mission, we’ve outlined a set of open-ended directions that you can tweak and adjust to your liking.

Glühwein Recipe: How to Make Your New Favorite Kind of Mulled Wine - The Manual (2)

Ingredients

  • Red wine (we suggest something dry like Pinot Noir or Cabernet Sauvignon; do not use Merlot)
  • Cloves
  • Cinnamon sticks
  • Orange peels, orange slices, or just a whole orange (whichever you prefer)
  • Orange bitters (or liqueur)
  • Sugar

Optional additions:

  • Nutmeg
  • Anise
  • Honey
  • Lemon or lime
  • Brandy

Instructions

  1. Start by dumping all your wine into a crock pot, then turn it to itslowest heat setting. Alternatively, you can put the wine in a large pot, place it on a stove top, and keep the heat on low.
  2. Toss in thecloves, cinnamon, and orange. Don’t go overboard — we recommend starting with 5 whole cloves and 2 cinnamon sticks per 750 ml (one bottle) of wine, then scaling up from there.If you’ve got spices in packet form, use one per 750 ml of wine.
  3. Put a lid on your mixture and let it warm up slowly, giving plenty of time for the spices to mingle with the wine.
  4. Once it starts to heat up (you should notice condensed alcohol vapor on the lid), stir in some sugar. The amount you add is up to you, but we recommend about 1/4 cup per 750 ml of wine. Start with a little less than that, then gradually add more until you hit your preferred sweetness level.
  5. While you’re at it, taste for the cinnamon and clove. If the spices are overwhelming, add more wine; if they’re not strong enough, add more spices — but go in small increments no matter what you do.
  6. Once you’re at optimal sweetness/spice levels, add a few dashes of orange bitters. Stir it in dash by dash until the orange flavor is about as strong as the clove and cinnamon. If you don’t have orange bitters, a couple shots of orange liqueur (such as Cointreau or Grand Marnier) will workjust as well.
  7. Let it cook long enough for the flavors to mingle (usually around 20 to 40 minutes total) and then serve it piping hot. Garnish with some orange peel if you want to be fancy, or maybe even a cinnamon stick if you want to be downright swanky.

The best advice we can give you is to treat it like an ongoing experiment. Taste your mixture often and make little adjustments along the way until you’re satisfied with the taste.

Once you’ve got the basics down, you can add in your own flourishes: some lemon or lime to give it a bit more zing, some brandy to make it warmer on the way down, or otherwintry spices. Nutmeg makes it feel more Christmasy, anise gives it a subtle liquorice-like note, and vanilla adds a silky touch. We’ve even seen people throw in pieces of fresh ginger.Your personal touches will make this wintertime favorite a tradition for years to come.

If you’re craving something more chocolatey, try out this recipe for red wine hot cocoa. And if you need some tunes to listen to while you’r whipping up all this booze, may we suggest our Christmas playlist?

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Glühwein Recipe: How to Make Your New Favorite Kind of Mulled Wine - The Manual (3)

Bacon, ribs, ham, sausage, chops. For all of the incredible gifts pork provides, it's still one of the most under-appreciated meats on the market, and that just doesn't make sense. Not only is this gorgeous meat delicious, but in a world where grocery store prices are still absurdly high, and most proteins cost far more than they did just a few short years ago, trusty pork seems to be holding steadfast in its mission to make both our wallets and our mouths happy.

The gifts from the other white meat are hearty and diverse, ranging from tender and delicate, elegant bites to hearty, rich, and saucy barbecue fareand everything in between. But with all of the options behind the butcher counter, how do you know which pork cuts are best? How do you know which cut to choose when it comes to impressing your guests at this weekend's dinner party? Or which to select for the best pulled pork sandwiches that your kids will devour with glee?

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4 incredible vermouth co*cktails you’re missing out on

Vermouth co*cktails to try at home

Glühwein Recipe: How to Make Your New Favorite Kind of Mulled Wine - The Manual (4)

We often talk about the main spirit being the most important aspect of a co*cktail. This means that while bourbon, dark rum, tequila, or gin gets all the press, the other ingredients get the Rodney Dangerfield treatment. And while bitters are referred to as the “salt and pepper” of the co*cktail world, we believe that (depending on the co*cktail) vermouth might be just as important.

What’s a Martini without vermouth? Well, it’s pretty much just a boozy glass of gin (or vodka if you’re into that sort of thing). It’s not a Boulevardier without the vermouth; you might as well just make an Old Fashioned instead if your Manhattan is sans vermouth.

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How to make the Garibaldi, the world’s most complicated 2-Ingredient co*cktail

Warm weather, here we come with the Garibaldi

Glühwein Recipe: How to Make Your New Favorite Kind of Mulled Wine - The Manual (5)

The classic two-ingredient Garibaldi co*cktail embodies the perfect summer co*cktail: sweet, refreshing, and easy to drink. Well-made versions hit all the right notes: The bitterness and complexity of Campari married to the fruit-filled simplicity of orange juice, while a top layer of foam gives a rich texture. This versatile beverage goes nicely as an aperitivo before dinner, at brunch, or for an afternoon pick-me-up. Though there is some finesse to making a respectable Garibaldi, you won’t need much in the way of complicated liqueurs or specialty bitters.

The co*cktail is named after Giuseppe Garibaldi, the 19th-century revolutionary who successfully united Italy. Aptly symbolizing Italian unification in a glass, the Garibaldi joins the north (Lombardy being the birthplace of Campari) with the south (oranges grown in Sicily). You can also draw a parallel between the color of the drink and the red-hued shirts worn by Garibaldi’s freedom fighters — some say its bright hue is the reason it’s called the Garibaldi. Curiously, Garibaldi adopted his trademark style of red shirt, poncho, and hat while living in exile in South America.

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Glühwein Recipe: How to Make Your New Favorite Kind of Mulled Wine - The Manual (2024)

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